The Sun (Malaysia)

Major Japanese insurers to offload ¥500b Honda shares

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TOKYO: Four of Japan’s top property and casualty insurers and other financial firms plan to sell ¥500 billion (RM14.6 billion) of shares in Honda Motor, three people said, as the unwinding of crossshare­holding practices accelerate­s.

Tokio Marine Holdings, Sompo Holdings and two units of MS&AD Insurance Group will together offload shares in the automaker, said the people, who declined to be identified because the informatio­n has not been made public.

Other financial institutio­ns will also pare back their Honda stakes, bringing the total sale to around ¥500 billion based on the company’s current share price, the sources said.

Honda is set to soon formally give the insurers the go-ahead to sell its shares, the sources said.

The automaker has already announced plans to buy back up to ¥300 billion of its shares during the current financial year, a move that could help absorb some of the impact of the sale.

Honda declined to comment on the insurers’ sale, saying only that the informatio­n was not something it itself had announced.

Spokesmen for Tokio Marine, Sompo and MS&AD declined to comment.

The four firms, which include MS&AD units Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance and Aioi Nissay Dowa Insurance, have previously said they would bring all cross-shareholdi­ng arrangemen­ts to zero.

Honda is one of the top five cross-shareholdi­ng companies for the insurers except for Aioi Nissay Dowa Insurance, according to securities filings as of March.

The sale of shares of a high-profile company, in which the insurers have notable stakes, is the latest sign that the unwinding of cross-shareholdi­ng is gaining pace in Japan.

Cross-shareholdi­ng, or companies holding shares in each other, was long seen as a way to cement business ties.

However, governance experts and foreign investors have said it protects management from shareholde­rs, leading to lax governance.

The four insurers, or their parents, held more than ¥300 billion of Honda shares as of March, with Tokio Marine at ¥161 billion, Sompo Japan at ¥81 billion, Mitsui Sumitomo at ¥73 billion and Aioi Nissay at ¥2.8 billion, securities filings showed.

In total, the four held some ¥9 trillion worth of cross-shareholdi­ngs as of March, with Toyota Motor, Shin-etsu Chemical and Itochu among the top names, the filings showed.

In December, the four insurers were handed a business improvemen­t order by Japan’s Financial Services Agency after they were found to have fixed the prices of their corporate insurance fees.

The regulator told them to reduce their cross-shareholdi­ngs. – Reuters

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